CLEVELAND (AP) - The Cleveland Cavaliers envision an arena full
of cheering fans with no tickets in their pockets. Ticket
brokers say it can't be done, but the team believes electronic
ticketing will sweep the sports and entertainment industries
much as it did the airline industry.
"The paper ticket market is fundamentally inefficient and
arcane," said Cavaliers chief marketing officer Chad Estis. "I
don't think there's a role for that in the future."
While some major league baseball teams have introduced
electronic ticketing, the Cavaliers have taken it a step
further, providing a completely paperless transaction. Nearly a
third of their season-ticket holders use Flash Seats, owner Dan
Gilbert's online ticketing company.
The firm is looking to sell other professional teams on the
concept, allowing them to cash in on the lucrative secondary
ticket market. Teams long have been frustrated because they sell
seats for the price listed on the ticket, only to have scalpers
outside the stadium get double and triple that figure.
"I hope to be in every league starting next fall," said Flash
Seats chief executive officer Sam Gerace, who would not say
which teams have expressed interest.
A decade ago, the airlines industry found it could save money
by going paperless and eliminate passengers' fears of losing or
forgetting tickets. Southwest Airlines says 73 percent of its
bookings now are done through the Internet.
Flash Seats isn't all that different. Season-ticket holders
who elect to go paperless register at and get into games by
swiping a credit card or driver's license at the arena.http://www.flashseats.com
They can transfer their seats by e-mail and may sell their
tickets via Flash Seats, naming their price. Flash Seats charges
the buyer a 20 percent fee.
Among the benefits: Buyers don't have to worry about a ticket
being counterfeit, Gerace said.
The secondary ticket market has grown into a $10
billion-a-year industry, according to Sucharita Mulpuru, a
senior analyst for Forrester Research Inc. (FORR)
About $3 billion of those sales are online.
"The online piece of it has been growing quickly. There are
new sites. There's more comfort with it," said Mulpuru, whose
clients include eBay and Amazon. "Before it was a very
fragmented local process. The Internet has helped to eradicate
those geographic barriers."
The NFL is looking into electronic ticketing league wide,
exploring whether it would be viable for teams that host just 10
home games, including preseason, each year, versus 41 for
basketball, said Brian McCarthy, an NFL spokesman. He would not
comment on whether the league has had discussions with Flash
Seats.
Fifteen major league clubs use technology similar to Flash
Seats. Fans buy seats online, then go to a kiosk outside the
stadium, swipe a credit card and get a receipt that gets them in
the gate, said Jim Gallagher, spokesman for MLB.com.
The San Francisco Giants are one of several teams that
provide a Web site for fans to sell and transfer tickets much
like Flash Seats, but the transaction isn't entirely paperless,
team spokesman Russ Stanley said.
Flash Seats faces competition from sites such as and that in
recent years have given individuals the ability to become ticket
brokers.http://www.stubhub.comhttp://www.razorgator.com
StubHub Inc., a San Francisco-based startup that was
purchased this month by eBay Inc. (EBAY)
for $310 million in cash, generated more than $100 million in
revenue last year. It charges users a 15 percent fee to sell
tickets on the site, while the buyers are charged a 10 percent
commission.
Many teams work with StubHub and refer fans to the site,
including the Chicago Bears and New Jersey Nets. But the New
England Patriots sued the company in November, alleging the site
encourages fans to break state law that bans selling tickets for
more than $2 above face value. The New York Yankees revoked
season tickets of fans who sold their seats on StubHub.
StubHub's sales of Cavaliers tickets - a hot item because of
superstar LeBron James and the team's solid performance this
season - have gone up even with the emergence of Flash Seats,
said Colin Evans, StubHub's vice president of sales and business
development.
Evans thinks it will be difficult for the Cavaliers, or any
team, to go paperless for every seat in the arena. He said fans
who sell on StubHub have more potential buyers because the site
offers numerous sporting events and concerts.
"Sellers go where buyers are," he said. "As long as there's
that buyer demand, you're going to get sellers."
The Cavaliers say they're generating buyers by advertising
heavily during Cavaliers radio and TV broadcasts. Bringing more
teams to Flash Seats also would increase the number of visitors
to the site.
Mark Klang, president of Amazing Tickets, a ticket brokerage
based in suburban Cleveland, believes it will be difficult to
separate fans from their paper tickets, especially white-collar
types who give them away to clients.
"Anybody that is paying a premium for tickets likes to have
something in their hands," he said.
Tickets still are important for practical reasons, said Josh
Logan, director of ticket operations for the Houston Rockets,
noting that fans in club seats need them to get access to a
special bar and concessions area.
"I don't see any time soon phasing it out completely," Logan
said.
The Rockets haven't considered Flash Seats, but are looking
into sending ticket bar codes to fans' mobile phones or PDAs
(personal digital assistants) that would be scanned at the
arena, Logan said.
Flash Seats plans to get more season-ticket holders involved
next season, then eventually sell single-game tickets
electronically. The Cavaliers and Flash Seats would not comment
on whether they've seen profits yet.
The Cavaliers rewarded season-ticket holders who made the
plunge into electronic ticketing this season by offering them 10
percent off playoff tickets.
"I love it," said Lee Baskey, who won't go back to paper
tickets next season. "It's a neat concept. When I first heard
about it I had 8,000 questions."
Baskey, who uses his tickets for both his family and
customers in his insurance business, said his main concern was
how easy it would be to transfer tickets. He said there's been
no glitches.
"It will grow on people once they educate people on what it's
about," he said. "I don't know if they'll ever be able to go 100
percent. We're creatures of habit. People want something
tangible."
Although the Cavaliers give Flash Seats users a stub with
their seat number on it, some fans have complained that they
miss keeping their glossy tickets as souvenirs. Flash Seats
plans to give out flashier commemorative seat locators by
February.
Gerace thinks it's only a matter of time before all major
sports, concert and theater events are paperless.
"We're about to make history," he said. "We're going to make
something disappear."